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PoliticsBonds

Burnham’s rise revives talk of war bonds to fund the UK military

By
Philip Aldrick
Philip Aldrick
,
Lucy White
Lucy White
, and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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By
Philip Aldrick
Philip Aldrick
,
Lucy White
Lucy White
, and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
June 28, 2026, 11:23 AM ET
British Army 3 Rifles in an undisclosed training ground near the Russian border in Finland on Monday May 25, 2026.
British Army 3 Rifles in an undisclosed training ground near the Russian border in Finland on Monday May 25, 2026.Ben Birchall/PA Images via Getty Images
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Andy Burnham, Britain’s soon-to-be prime minister, wants an array of bold new policies to attract voters who have grown tired of a Labour government mired in indecision and political backbiting. One idea is the issuing of war bonds.

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The proposal was dismissed by outgoing Prime Minister Keir Starmer earlier in June, who told the House of Commons that war bonds would be “just another form of borrowing.” Yet Burnham, on course to become the new prime minister in the next three weeks, may be more receptive — one of his key advisers, former Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane, has previously supported the idea.

War bonds would effectively be gilts, sold to the public, with the proceeds going straight to Britain’s creaking defense sector. The UK public is sitting on hundreds of billions of pounds in savings accounts and the theory goes that many people would be tempted by patriotic fervor — as well as tax breaks and the safety of government debt — to transfer some of their cash to a financial product that helps keep the country safe. Brits put about £70 billion ($92.5 billion) into independent savings accounts, known as ISAs, every year, as much as £20,000 of which is tax free. Much is in cash ISAs that can have low interest rates.

There’s considerable support for the idea in Parliament, where the Liberal Democrats — a centrist opposition party — has advocated for war bonds on 25 separate occasions since the turn of the year. Senior executives in the City of London are also keen, having suggested it to Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves.

The funding of the military has become a thorny issue in the UK. John Healey resigned as defense secretary earlier in June, alongside junior minister Al Carns, arguing that the government’s planned increase in spending was insufficient to protect the country. A long-delayed investment plan will be published ahead of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit in July, with the government still considering ways to lift the spending boost above £13.5 billion. Some advocates of war bonds believe they could raise a further £20 billion.

Under the proposals raised by City economists, war bonds would be exempt from 40% inheritance tax. Gilts are also free from capital gains tax, so the policy should attract at least £10 billion in the first year and more after that, according to Nicholas Lyons, chairman of Standard Life Plc.

Lyons and Simon French, the chief economist at Panmure Liberum who floated the idea back in December, said the arrangement would give the government a cut-price way of borrowing and improve the resilience of the UK’s critical gilt market, around a third of which is owned by foreign investors.

Read More: UK Urged to Tap £2 Trillion Pot and Bring Gilts to the Masses

French said the government could issue tax-exempt 10-year war bonds with interest rates about 0.5 percentage points lower than standard 10 year gilts and still attract considerable retail interest. The arrangement would appeal to older generations with large savings in particular, especially after the Labour government imposed inheritance tax on pension assets and applied a surcharge to high value homes. However, such a policy would reduce inheritance tax revenues for future chancellors.

Officials in No. 10 Downing Street will lobby Burnham to take up the idea, according to the Guardian newspaper, but his advisers may be divided on the topic. While Haldane has supported the principle, ex-Goldman Sachs economist Jim O’Neill is more reticent.

Burnham himself has retreated from earlier suggestions that defense spending should fall outside the UK’s self-imposed fiscal rules and has vowed to stick with Reeves’ take on those rules — namely that day-to-day spending is met by revenues by the third year of the forecast, and that net debt should fall by 2029/30 as a share of the economy.

O’Neill has said Burnham would instead seek to use “flexibility” in the fiscal rules to increase spending on infrastructure projects that would boost growth. That idea was backed by Reeves this week who said “most defense spending is capital investment,” adding that a multilateral defense mechanism with European allies “will enable us to stockpile things like munitions off government balance sheets, which again enables us to do more upfront, because it is capital investment.”

Read More: UK Seeks Cheap Long-Range Weapons for Ukraine Without US Input

Burnham is supported by dozens of Labour’s left-wing MPs and has advocated higher public spending — so he’s unlikely to look for cuts in other departments when bulking up Britain’s defenses. That leaves borrowing or raising taxes, which have already increased substantially since Labour came to power in 2024.

A specialist debt-raise would have a timely precedent, following on from UK green bonds launched five years ago and extended to retail investors for the first time in March. Back in 2021, green energy was a key focus for the government and then-chancellor Rishi Sunak made a big political play of his bright idea, which went down well with investors. Today, the priority has moved from the environment to the battlefield and, with Burnham’s ascension, advocates of war bonds have a shot at turning their vision into reality.

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